Historical changes in the distribution and functions of
large wood in Puget Lowland rivers
Brian D. Collins, David R. Montgomery, and Andrew D. Haas
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 59(1): 66-76 (2002)
Abstract: We
examined changes in wood abundance and functions in Puget Lowland rivers from
the last ~150 years of land use by comparing field data from an 11-km-long
protected reach of the Nisqually River with field data from the Snohomish and
Stillaguamish rivers and with archival data from several Puget Lowland rivers.
Current wood abundance is one to two orders of magnitude less than before
European settlement in the Snohomish and Stillaguamish basins. Most
importantly, wood jams are now rare because of a lack of very large wood that
can function as key pieces and low rates of wood recruitment. These changes in
wood abundance and size appear to have fundamentally changed the morphology,
dynamics, and habitat abundance and characteristics of lowland rivers across
scales from channel unit to valley bottom. Based on our field studies, rivers
had substantially more and deeper pools historically. Archival data and field
studies indicate that wood jams were integral to creating and maintaining a
dynamic, anastomosing river pattern with numerous floodplain channels and
abundant edge habitat and routed floodwaters and sediment onto floodplains.
Establishing the condition of the riverine landscape before European settlement
sets a reference against which to evaluate contemporary conditions and develop
restoration objectives.